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University of Nebraska - Lincoln
DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Faculty Publications: Department of Teaching,
Learning and Teacher Education
Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher
Education
4-2013
The language of money: How verbal and visual
metonymy shapes public opinion about financial
events
Theresa Catalano
University of Nebraska-Lincoln, tcatalano2@unl.edu
Linda R. Waugh
University of Arizona
Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/teachlearnfacpub
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Catalano, Theresa and Waugh, Linda R., "The language of money: How verbal and visual metonymy shapes public opinion about
financial events" (2013). Faculty Publications: Department of Teaching, Learning and Teacher Education. 130.
http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/teachlearnfacpub/130
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International Journal ofLanguage Studies
Volume 7, Number 2, April2013, pp. 31-60
The language ofmoney: How verbal and visual metonymy shapes public
opinion about financial events
Theresa CATALAN o, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, USA
Linda R. WAUGH, University of Arizona, USA
"Everything means something," Lyra said, "we just have to find out how to
read it." (from Lyra's Oxford by Philip Pullman)
Much recent work on metonymy has concentrated on its definition,
properties and functions (Benczes, Barcelona & Ruiz de Mendoza
Ibáñez, 2011) but few studies have examined the combination ofverbal
and visual metonymy or the benefits of multimodal metonymical
analysis in issues of social justice. In this paper eleven news articles
regarding issues in financial discourse such as the financial crisis, fiscal
cliff, underwater homeowners and entitlements are examined visually
and verbally from a variety of online newspaper sources. Results reveal
intricate visual and verbal metonymies such as EFFECT FOR CAUSE,
RESULT FOR ACTION, INSTITUTION FOR PERSON, DEFINING
PROPERTY FOR CATEGORY and BODY PART FOR ACTION that aid in
hiding or highlighting events and act as ideology carriers that are
difficult to detect. The unique contribution of this article lies not only in
the exposure of linguisticjnon-linguistic strategies used to mitigate the
role of those responsible for the financial crisis, or to shape public
opinion on a particular policy or issue, but also in the attention it gives
to metonymy's role (in text and image) in the positive representation of
corporate America whieh, we will argue, has resulted in few
repercussions for the financial sector.
Keywords: Financial Crisis; Fiscal Cliff; Metaphor; Underwater Homeowners;
Entitlements; Metonymy; Multimodal Analysis; Financial Discourse
1. Introduction 1
Does the topie of finance alter your mood? Have you recently felt like falling
off a cliff? More and more the hyperbolic language of the financial world has
1
The authors would like to thank Kristen Nugent (espeeially for her eareful eye in
editing), Ron Breiger, Luigi Catalano, lsabella Catalano and Lorenzo Catalano for
their suggestions and thoughts related to financial events. Thanks also to Valentina
Catalano for reading aloud Lyra's Oxford atthe time this paper was written.
lSSN: 2157-4898; ElSSN: 2157-4901
© 2013 lJLS; Printed in the USA by Lulu Press lne.
2. Background
2.1. How metonymy works in text and image
ibid
Wall Street Journal
Photo 1.
Photo 2
ibid
2.2. Research on metonymy and language of finance
The Little Blue Book
ibid
3. Method
Wall Street
Journal Washington Post New York Times Los Angeles Times
US News
Antconc 3.2
4
4. Results and discussion
4.1. Financial crisis
placing blame, deflecting blame, looking for solutions, predicting the
future economy
Wall Street Journal
Photo 3
ibid
ibid
Photo 4
Photo 5
ibid
Photo 6
Photo 7.
4.2. Fiscal cliff
Use of Fiscal Cliff in Three Different Online Newspapers
fiscal
cliff
Photo 8.
ibid
7
Photo 9.
4.3. Underwater
home
Photo 10
Photo 11
4.4. Entitlements
Photo 12.
Major Metonymies in Verbal Analysis
Type of metonymy
Examples from texts
Major Metonymies in Visual Analysis
Type of metonymy
5. Conclusion
Examples from texts
The Authors
References
Defining metonymy in cognitive linguistics: Toward a consensus
view,
Mythologies
Defining metonymy in cognitive linguistics:
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metonymy in cognitive linguistics: Toward a consensus view.
Ways of seeing
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The International Journal of the Image, 2
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a
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Toward
a
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USA Today
Language, mind, and culture
Reading images: The grammar of visual
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thinking and talking democratic
The semantics of metaphor
International Journal of English
Studies, 11
The modes of modern writing
Introduction to multimodal analysis
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The language of crime and deviance: An
introduction to critical linguistic analysis in media and popular culture.
The Journal of Politics, 72
Multimodal
Metaphor
Journal of the Spanish Association of AngloAmerican Studies, 33
Journal of Management
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Journal of Pragmatics, 42
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Discourse and practice: New tools for critical
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Discourse and elite racism
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Appendix A: Texts used in the corpus
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